27/06/06 Blue skies
research
CaSE today emphasised the importance of campaigning for blue-skies
research. Speaking at a reception in Parliament organised by SET
for Britain for outstanding young researchers, Don Braben of CaSE's
executive committee pointed out that the greatest scientists of the
twentieth century would not get funding in today's target-driven regime.
"People like Max Planck, Crick and Watson, Einstein, would simply
not be allowed to do what they did if they had to work in a British
university today," said Don Braben before pointing out that the
American National Science Board is looking a wholly new funding stream
for 'transformative research' of the kind that these great researchers
produced. Speaking at the same event, CaSE's Director, Peter Cotgreave,
said that the British science and engineering community needs to continue
campaigning in Parliament and elsewhere, if we want to see blue skies
research remaining as an important part of the UK science base.
27/06/06 Science in Parliament
CaSE was today delighted when the Prime Minister thanked us for our
efforts on behalf of British science. CaSE was taking part in Parliamentary
Links Day - organised by the Royal Society of Chemistry on behalf
of the wider scientific community - with the foreign secretary, Margaret
Beckett MP, and various senior parliamentarians, including the Chief
Scientific Adviser, Sir David King, and Chair of the Science &
Technology Committee, Phil Willis MP, who quoted from CaSE in his
address to the hundreds of scientists, engineers and parliamentarians
assembled in Portcullis House. Tony Blair sent a written message of
support, in which he thanks CaSE by name for its work.
26/06/06 Political debate
about science
CaSE today welcomed the growing interest in science policy
by mainstream politicians. Commenting in the Financial Times,
CaSE welcomed the Conservative Party's review of science policy,
chaired by Ian Taylor MP, a former minister who is also a member of
CaSE's Advisory Council. "For too long, science has tended to
be ignored by the Opposition," said Dr Peter Cotgreave, Director
of CaSE, "and because the Government has substantially increased
the science budget, there has been relatively little criticism of
its policies. But like any other set of policies, the Government's
science policies are not perfect, and more scrutiny by the Opposition
can only be a good thing."
22/06/06 Knowledge transfer
CaSE today stressed the need for fundamental research to
feed into the economy. In a letter to the Financial Times,
CaSE points out that a recent political dispute has failed to recognise
the importance of basic research. The text of the letter is given
below:
The claim by Shadow Chancellor George Osborne that the UK is
not doing enough to link businesses with universities and its dismissal
by Lord Sainsbury, the science minister, and others (Financial Times,
June 19 and June 20) are all very entertaining, but the truth is more
complex. Policies in this area are important for the UK’s economy.
Lord Sainsbury is right that in regard to their links with industry,
universities have changed out of all recognition in the last ten years,
and there is great deal more entrepreneurial activity coming out of
academia than in the past; the UK is doing better than any of its
European competitors. But Mr Osborne is equally right that we remain
a long way from matching the USA’s performance.
Part of the reason that the USA is doing so much better is that
it started this kind of activity decades earlier than we did, and
it takes many years to turn a clever idea in the mind of a researcher
to a major and successful enterprise.
The whole system relies on sufficient funding for the highest
quality basic ‘blue skies’ research, which provides the
seed corn for many future developments. The current Government has
increased overall levels of funding very substantially, greatly improving
the conditions for much university research. However, many research
leaders feel that the traditional freedom to pursue novel and unfashionable
lines of inquiry has been curtailed by increasing bureaucracy and
peculiarities of the funding system. In particular, there is a mismatch
between the level of funding for safe research that fits easily into
existing programmes and genuinely novel or high-risk research with
the potential to make big leaps forward in knowledge.
19/06/06 Science Minister
CaSE today met with the Science Minister, Lord Sainsbury, to talk
about science education, the funding of the universities, and private
sector research and innovation. "With next year's Comprehensive
Spending Review fast approaching, we talked to the science minister
about the areas that need attention if the Government is to achieve
its aim of making the UK the best place in the world for science,"
said Dr Peter Cotgreave, Director of CaSE, after the meeting. "We
believe that much more needs to be done to replenish the number of
science teachers, we need to decide who is going to pay for the country's
scientific aspirations for the universities and colleges, and crucially,
we need to work out how to make Britain a more attractive place for
the private sector to invest in research and development."
15/06/06 Knowledge
transfer
CaSE today welcomed the House of Commons' endorsement of
its policies on getting value for money for taxpayers' investment
in science. The Science & Technology Committee's report on Research
Council Support for Knowledge Transfer, published today, includes
support for CaSE's positions that Regional Development Agencies need
to work much harder if they are to fulfil their potential, that a
bewildering array of schemes and initiatives is confusing for scientists
and engineers and, most importantly, that focusing on knowledge transfer
must not detract from the Research Councils' primary role of finding
and funding the best scientific research. "We took part in a
private seminar with the Committee and also gave written evidence
to the inquiry," said Dr Peter Cotgreave, Director of CaSE, "and
we're extremely pleased that the Select Committee seems to agree with
everything we said".
read
CaSE's written evidence to the inquiry
read
the Committee's report
14/06/06 Research Assessment
CaSE today welcomed the Government's announcement of a firm
intention to abolish the Research Assessment Exercise for science
and engineering. Commenting in the Financial Times, CaSE's
Director, Peter Cotgreave, said "The RAE served an important
role when it was introduced 20 years ago but it has become an albatross
around the neck of British science and I wish it was being abolished
immediately."
05/06/06 Britain's scientific
competitiveness
CaSE today highlighted the need for the UK to be scienitifically
competitive at all levels. Speaking on Radio 4's today programme,
CaSE's director said that "the only way that this country is
going to make a living in the future is by being more scientific,
by being more technological. We can’t compete with China and
India on wage costs, and the only way we’re going to do it is
by being really good at science, at every level – in school,
in universities, in companies, right the way across the board."
CaSE praised the Chancellor of the Exchequer for attempting to put
together a package of policies that would help to make this happen.
01/06/06 University funding
CaSE today called on the Higher Education Funding Council to place
greater emphasis on science and engineering in the national interest.
In an article in Laboratory News, CaSE points out that two
Parliamentary Committees have recently summoned representatives of
the universities to explain why things are not going smoothly. But
while the pay dispute investigated by the Education Committee seems
intractable, the pressure on science departments examined by the Science
& Technology Committee could be partially addressed immediately
if HEFCE reversed its unjustifiable decision to downgrade science
in the funding formula. The article concludes that as we work out
how to meet the full costs of a world-class, mass Higher Education
system, HEFCE "will need to ensure that taxpayers' money is used
fairly in the national interest, and that will mean taking science
and engineering more seriously".
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